136 Arden for Men. is the greatest thing Elizabeth Arden has done for women. /' / /,' o /, \ I . ." ' . ..... .,... . I, "1." "'I1.. III/ft;..; !!./:, .. lltl"' .':.-;.' /JI/1IJ/I':1i -:;" . 26/ JJ'1 I'll' .A.'" ':- . I . Elizabeth Arden's incomparable After Shave Lotion for men, wIth the Sandalwood scent women re- member i 3.50 or 6.50, plus taxi at Arden for Men 1 East 54th Street FOOTBALL Archives " H ow TO WATCH FOOTBALL" was what the late John Lard- ner, back in the forties, called a treatise in which he maintained that foot- ball is not a sport that can be watched, and nothing has happened in the inter- vening twenty years to gainsay his con- tention. I knew at the time that he was right; in fact, I had become convinced of the truth of his principle twenty years I before. It was not until October of . 1933 that I puzzled out the partial solution that a few colleagues had de- vised for the unsolvable problem. Equipping themselves with field glasses, "i notebooks, and a working knowledge of shorthand, they had taken up posi- tions in press boxes under the eaves of { the football stadia of the Eastern Sea- board, and there, Ranked by a covey of { (we'll say) voluble Dartmouth chart- makers on one side and a pride of volu- ble Pennsylvania chartmakers on the other, they discovered a viable technique of watchIng football by piecing together a set of Improper fractions. ("All right, Jack, you watch the left side of the line on defense. Ed, you watch the linebackers. Bill, you watch the right side of the line. I'll take the secondary. George. . .") Looking and listening in every direction in these particular sur- roundIngs, my colleagues were able to fix on paper a hieroglyphic précis of what was really going on down on the playing field, even though no one of them could see it all for himself. Their art is long, and their life (es- pecially on blizzard and typhoon Satur- days in late November) is shortened but theirs is a labor of love, and so is "The Fireside Book of Football," which-edited by Jack Newcombe, who has played the game himself, and overseen hy Peter Schwed, one of his- tory's calmest and yet most dedicated watchers of I V} League foothall-has lately been put out b) Simon & Schus- ter. The Lardner diatribe is in it, and so are other expected guests-Heywood Broun and Tom O'Reilly and Joel Sayre and Caswell Adams and John Kieran and Red Smith, for a starter. And so are unexpected ones-Scott Fitzgerald and Katharine Brush and John McNultv and Samuel Yellen and Frank Sullivan, for a starter. So is Owen Johnson, because of "Stover at Lawrenceville." And so are an assort- ll1ent of pertinent cartoons. All the f\:\ ? ""'''''';1n\P'\ '''''P?\I''''' } Àl t1 } } } } OF } NEW ENGLAND } WIII P.J""maleJtJ } } \ ce -/884 } } } ,/ ! } " } '\ --...... } -" , } 'b-* If! \ } rfÞ } } ;$ } ,..". ..--- Jhl Qiuilb Otée An old school favorite available in hand stained English Albion grain or imported black calf. Fully leather lined. Available at fìnest shops or please write or.1- .Alb,en Iroe QrO. fØMC'áJn 6/j . , þ , ..Z' :-- . - . 4I/IÞ ^.... .- .;,4I/Jo ' ..#.91 .' "'. . ....... ,, 1. A. IÞ · '" ^"'>>4I!.'V t " ' 4!Þ .,^ ", \.:w " "Ii iiìi ìiiIU ) -" ,, ";',, \ltl . ji.h " \ \,, *" .... " . '&"':,,\', ,;' ..Þ' '7 \\. '.. ,,^ ^ oil ,' t.>;. . , ',.'-W-e: . >>.. ' : , WE KNEW HE WASN'T A REAL ENGLISHMAN WHEN HE ASKED "WHAT ARE VIYELLA@SOCKS?" What Englishman worth his tea and crumpets hasn't heard about Viyella Men's Hosiery? Spun in England from fine cotton and the softest wool, Viyella is shrink-proof, fade- proof, moth-proof and almost never needs darning. Anklet length...$1.75 pel pair. Garter length and over- the-calf length...$2.00 per pair. ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF KAYSER-ROTH